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Team USA marches into Milan as 2026 Winter Olympics open with historic ceremony

Megan O'neill by Megan O'neill
March 28, 2026
in U.S.
Reading Time: 8 mins read
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Image Credit: U.S. Department of State - Public domain/Wiki Commons

Image Credit: U.S. Department of State - Public domain/Wiki Commons

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The 2026 Winter Olympics officially opened Friday night with a ceremony unlike any in Games history, sending Team USA and dozens of other delegations into a celebration spread across four Italian locations instead of a single stadium.

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For the Americans, it marked a fitting start to a Games already underway. Competition began two days earlier, and a 232-athlete roster arrived in Italy as the largest U.S. Winter Olympic team in history.

What set the night apart was not only the scale of the production, but the way Milano Cortina embraced the geography of a Winter Games spread across mountains, valleys and urban venues.

The main ceremony unfolded at San Siro in Milan, but athletes also paraded in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Livigno and Predazzo. The result was a distributed opening ceremony that broke from the single-stadium model long associated with the Olympics.

A four-site opening that changed the usual script

Image Credit: Unknown authorUnknown author - Public domain/Wiki Commons
Image Credit: Unknown authorUnknown author – Public domain/Wiki Commons

The opening ceremony carried the title “Armonia,” or harmony, and linked Milan with the mountain communities set to host many of the outdoor events. Instead of requiring athletes from alpine and sliding sports to spend much of the day traveling to a single stadium, organizers staged major parts of the parade closer to the venues where many will compete.

The result was both practical and visually distinct. Athletes marched not only under stadium lights in Milan, but also in snow-covered settings in the Alps, reflecting the dual identity of these Games: part urban showcase, part mountain festival. The multi-site format created an opening unlike any seen at a Winter Olympics, while still preserving the sense that the Games had begun.

It also addressed a long-standing tension. Winter Olympics rarely fit neatly within a single city, yet opening ceremonies have traditionally been staged as if they do. Milano Cortina took the opposite approach, building the ceremony around geography rather than ignoring it.

That decision gave smaller host communities a larger share of the spotlight and made the opening feel more connected to the competition map audiences will follow over the next two weeks.

Two cauldrons turned the opening into an Olympic first

Image Credit: ERIC  SALARD - CC BY-SA 4.0/Wiki Commons
Image Credit: ERIC SALARD – CC BY-SA 4.0/Wiki Commons

If the four-site format reshaped the parade, the cauldron lighting redefined the ceremony’s signature image. Instead of a single Olympic cauldron, organizers lit two — one in Milan and one in Cortina d’Ampezzo.

The twin cauldrons gave the ceremony a stronger sense of place, turning the Olympic flame into a symbol of a host concept built around both city and mountain settings.

The move created a second defining moment and reinforced the two-center identity of Milano Cortina.

In Milan, Italian alpine greats Alberto Tomba and Deborah Compagnoni lit the cauldron at the Arco della Pace. In Cortina, Sofia Goggia handled the honors, linking one of Italy’s top medal contenders with a region closely tied to alpine skiing.

That distinction matters because the cauldron is typically the single image that signals the Games have begun. Milano Cortina did not abandon that tradition — it reinterpreted it.

With one flame in the city and another in the mountains, organizers created a visual identity that reflects how these Games are physically arranged.

Team USA arrives with size, star power, and a packed schedule

Image Credit: youtube.com/Olympics
Image Credit: youtube.com/Olympics

For the United States, the ceremony was as much a checkpoint as a beginning. The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee named a 232-member team for Milano Cortina, underscoring the depth of the American delegation entering the Games.

Competition began before the opening ceremony, meaning some athletes were already in event mode by the time of the parade. That schedule made the decentralized format especially relevant for Team USA.

A traditional, all-athlete trip to a single stadium would have required longer travel for competitors based near mountain venues. Instead, Americans were able to take part in the ceremony while remaining closer to the sites where they train and compete.

Team USA’s flag bearers were speedskating champion Erin Jackson and bobsledder Frank Del Duca, giving the delegation a pair that reflects both accomplishment and range. Jackson entered the Games as one of the most recognizable names in U.S. speedskating, while Del Duca’s selection highlighted the breadth of the American program.

Images from the ceremony showed Americans participating across multiple locations, a reminder that Team USA entered the Games not in a single sweeping moment, but across a network of stages.

That approach traded some of the traditional single-venue spectacle for something more aligned with how these Olympics will unfold, making the team’s arrival feel closely tied to the competition map itself.

A diplomatic crowd and a test case for future Winter Games

Image Credit: U.S. Department of State - Public domain/Wiki Commons
Image Credit: U.S. Department of State – Public domain/Wiki Commons

The U.S. presence extended beyond the athletes. Vice President JD Vance attended the ceremony with second lady Usha Vance, adding a diplomatic dimension to a night that already carried significance beyond sport.

AP’s live coverage noted that Usha Vance was seated next to former International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach, underscoring how opening night also serves as a gathering point for political and sporting leadership.

Olympic opening ceremonies are not only artistic productions. They also function as diplomatic showcases, where governments signal engagement, host nations project identity and sporting institutions promote the values they want associated with the Games.

Milano Cortina’s ceremony embraced that role while also testing whether one of the Olympics’ most tradition-bound rituals could evolve without losing its emotional pull. The four-site format reduced strain on athletes and better reflected the geography of a Winter Games.

It also gave viewers a more layered broadcast and a ceremony that looked different because these Games are different.

Team USA entered that new model alongside the rest of the Olympic field, marching not into a single arena but onto a broader Italian stage built to reflect how winter sport is contested.

Whether future hosts adopt the format remains to be seen. What is clear is that Milano Cortina opened the Games by showing the ceremony itself can change.

For Team USA, the march into Milan was not just the start of another Olympics. It was the opening moment of a Winter Games willing to rethink some of its oldest traditions.

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Megan O'neill

Megan O'neill

Megan O’Neill is a Florida-based writer covering politics, public policy, and economic development, with a focus on state and local issues.

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